A global temperature increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius could unleash more than 1,000 gigatons of carbon and methanecurrently trapped beneath Siberian permafrost and accelerate global climate change, a new study says. In a study conducted in a frozen cave in Siberia, researchers analyzed stalactites and

While scientists have long believed that thawing permafrost in Arctic soils could release huge amounts of methane, in recent years they began to observe methane bubbling up from the bottom of the Arctic Ocean, as Susan Stranahan reported in 2008.READ THE e360 REPORT

stalagmites which, since they form only when rainwater and snowmelt drip into the caves, provide a glimpse into 500,000 years of changing permafrost conditions. According to their findings, records of an especially warm period 400,000 years ago suggest that a 1.5-degree increase compared to current temperatures would trigger the thawing of permafrost far north of its existing southern boundary. And since permafrost covers 24 percent of the exposed land surface in the Northern Hemisphere, significant thawing could release huge amounts of methane and carbon dioxide, said Anton Vaks, a scientist at Oxford University and lead researcher on the study, published in Science Express. In addition to the effects the loss of permafrost could have on climate, it could also have major regional implications, affecting roadways, railroads, and natural gas facilities built atop the frozen landscape. A 2012 study estimated that permafrost regions cover about 22 million square kilometers worldwide, including vast regions of Siberia, Central Asia, and the Himalayas.